Dust-to-metal ratios in damped Lyman-alpha absorbers: Fresh clues to the origins of dust and optical extinction towards gamma-ray bursts
A. De Cia, C. Ledoux, S. Savaglio, P. Schady, P.M. Vreeswijk

TL;DR
This study measures dust-to-metal ratios in gamma-ray burst and quasar damped Lyman-alpha absorbers, revealing their dependence on metallicity and implications for dust production mechanisms across different galaxy environments.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive comparison of dust-to-metal ratios in GRB and QSO-DLAs across a wide redshift range, highlighting non-universality and dust production processes.
Findings
Dust-to-metal ratio increases with metallicity and metal column density.
Low-metallicity systems have lower dust fractions, indicating inefficient dust production.
High dust-to-metal ratios at high metallicity suggest rapid dust formation mechanisms.
Abstract
Motivated by the anomalous dust-to-metal ratios derived in the literature for gamma-ray burst (GRB) damped Lyman-alpha absorbers (DLAs), we measure these ratios using the dust-depletion pattern observed in UV/optical afterglow spectra associated with the ISM at the GRB host-galaxy redshifts. Our sample consists of 20 GRB absorbers and a comparison sample of 72 QSO-DLAs with redshift 1.2 < z < 4.0 and down to Z = 0.002 Z_Sol metallicities. The dust-to-metal ratio in QSO- and GRB-DLAs increases both with metallicity and metal column density, spanning ~10--110% of the Galactic value and pointing to a non universal dust-to-metal ratio. The low values of dust-to-metal ratio suggest that low-metallicity systems have lower dust fractions than typical spiral galaxies and perhaps that the dust in these systems is produced inefficiently, i.e. by grain growth in the low-metallicity regime with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
